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Assessment
of the Food Situation in Zimbabwe - November 2002: SUMMARY
National
NGO Food Security Network (FOSENET)
December
22 , 2002
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Reports from
166 reports from 53 districts of Zimbabwe for November 2002 indicate
that:
- Food security
has fallen again across most districts in November, with 5 districts
reporting improved supply from World Food Programme.
- Vulnerability
has widened. The share of districts reporting ‘everyone’ is
in need of food has risen from 0% in September to 40% in October
and 51% in November.
- Reports
of displaced people have fallen from 53% districts in August/September,
to 23% in November. Manicaland and Mashonaland East have had consistently
high levels of displaced people reported throughout the period.
- A majority
(81%) of districts report school dropout due to hunger, food
seeking and care of the ill by school children. Provision of food
at schools was noted to be an incentive for children to attend
and interruption or inadequacy of school feeding in three districts
reported to be associated with absenteeism.
- Falling,
erratic GMB and commercial supplies were reported in November
across the majority of districts, although with increased deliveries
of World Food Programme maize and improvements in GMB supplies
noted in 8 districts. The reported frequency and volume of GMB
deliveries fell consistently from July to November, with Matabeleland
North and South consistently reporting more districts, in some
cases with no deliveries for two months.
- The upper
price range reported of GMB grain of Z$202 is 74% above the controlled
price. Political barriers and supply constraints to GMB
grain have been reported from an increasing share of districts
between July and November and have superceded cost as the major
barrier to access.
- An extremely
low reported share of households were able to access adequate
seed (18%) and fertiliser (4%). Poor access to seed and thus
crops planted in a short rainfall season can exacerbate household
food insecurity.
- Commercial
supplies of basic foods were reported as low, erratic and increasingly
costly. Supplies have been variable, improving between July and
November in Mashonaland East, Masvingo and Matabeleland South,
but staying at low levels in Matabeleland North. Cost, reduced
supply, and non transparent sales were the major reported barriers
to commercially supplied food.
- Reported
informal market prices / 10kg maize meal ranged from Z$250-Z$2
000, nearly twenty times the controlled price, and in increase
of 233% in the reported informal market price between July-November
2002. Informal markets are explicitly reported to be linked
to leakages of controlled price food in six districts in November,
with profit margins of sale price over control price of up to
279% or $1884 / 10kg in grain sold.
- Wild fruits
and roots, cutting grains from the diet and cutting meals are
the most commonly reported strategies for survival. In 13% of
districts people are reported to be selling household assets –
livestock, goods- to buy food. Asset stripping for food, which
pushes households further into poverty, has increased in reported
frequency in the last two rounds of monitoring.
- Reported
relief supplies have increased, although with supplies stopped
in wards in 7 districts, in two of these due to political
circumstances. Elderly, sick or disabled people have been consistently
identified for four rounds of monitoring as the primary grouping
having difficulty accessing relief.
The November
round indicates some positive trends in increased WFP and relief
food coverage and improved standardization of cash for work payouts.
However it also notes worsening trends in vulnerability, in cost
inflation and political bias in GMB and market supplies.
Of serious
concern is the consistent shortfall in GMB and commercial maize
in Matabeleland North and South for several months, the reported
increase in sale of household assets to buy food, biased access
to controlled price foods fuelling speculation in informal markets
and the low reported level of access to seed and fertilizer in all
areas.
The latter
factors send a threat of chronic food insecurity and deepened poverty.
FOSENET
welcomes feedback on these reports.
Follow
up queries and feedback to: FOSENET, Box CY2720, Causeway, Harare
- fosenet@mweb.co.zw
Visit the FOSENET
fact sheet
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